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  1.  11
    Τρυφη_ and _υβρις in the Περι Βιων of Clearchus.Robert J. Gorman & Vanessa B. Gorman - 2010 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 154 (2):187-208.
    Current scholarship on Clearchus’ Lives emphasizes a moralizing historiographical schema of pernicious luxury, in which truphē leads to koros, then to hybris, and finally to destruction. Yet all the fragments used to construct this theory are preserved in one late source, the Deipnosophistae of Athenaeus. A study of the diction and immediate context of these so-called fragments demonstrates that the moral themes are presented in language that is far more likely to originate in the cover text rather than in the (...)
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  2.  27
    ‘The tyrants around Thoas and Damasenor’.Robert J. Gorman & Vanessa B. Gorman - 2000 - Classical Quarterly 50 (2):526-530.
    At Quaestiones Graecae 32.298c–d, Plutarch raises the question, τίνες ο ειναται παρᾰ Μιλησίος, ‘Who were the Perpetual Sailors among the Milesians?’ he frames the circumstances of his answer using a genitive absolute clause: τν περ Θόαντα κα Δαμασήνορα τυράννων καταλυθέντων. In the absence of any other mention of these men in the extent sources, these words—especially the appellation τυράνων—have caused concern among editors and commentators of Plutarch. In the Teubner edition of 1935 Titchener changes τυράνων to the accusative τυράννους, while (...)
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    ‘The tyrants around Thoas and Damasenor’.Robert J. Gorman & Vanessa B. Gorman - 2000 - Classical Quarterly 50 (2):526-530.
    At Quaestiones Graecae 32.298c–d, Plutarch raises the question, τίνες οἰ ειναται παρᾰ Μιλησίος, ‘Who were the Perpetual Sailors among the Milesians?’ he frames the circumstances of his answer using a genitive absolute clause: τν περ Θόαντα κα Δαμασήνορα τυράννων καταλυθέντων. In the absence of any other mention of these men in the extent sources, these words—especially the appellation τυράνων—have caused concern among editors and commentators of Plutarch. In the Teubner edition of 1935 Titchener changes τυράνων to the accusative τυράννους, while (...)
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    Democracy and the law in classical athens - (m.) Gagarin democratic law in classical athens. Pp. XIV + 194. Austin: University of texas press, 2020. Cased, us$45. Isbn: 978-1-4773-2037-2. [REVIEW]Vanessa B. Gorman - 2021 - The Classical Review 71 (2):463-465.
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